From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about the language. For other uses, see English (disambiguation).
English | ||||
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Pronunciation | /ˈɪŋɡlɪʃ/[1] | |||
Region | (see below) | |||
Native speakers | 360 million (2010)[2] L2: 375 million and 750 million EFL[3] |
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Language family | ||||
Writing system | English alphabet (Latin script) | |||
Official status | ||||
Official language in | 54 countries 27 non-sovereign entities United Nations European Union Commonwealth of Nations Council of Europe IOC NATO NAFTA OAS OECD OIC PIF UKUSA Agreement |
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Language codes | ||||
ISO 639-1 | en | |||
ISO 639-2 | eng | |||
ISO 639-3 | eng | |||
Linguasphere | 52-ABA | |||
Countries
where English is an official or de facto official language, or national
language, and is spoken fluently by the majority of the population
Countries where it is an official but not primary language
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English arose in the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of England and what is now southeast Scotland. Following the extensive influence of Great Britain and the United Kingdom from the 17th century to the mid-20th century, through the British Empire, and also of the United States since the mid-20th century,[6][7][8][9] it has been widely propagated around the world, becoming the leading language of international discourse and the lingua franca in many regions.[10][11]
Historically, English originated from the fusion of closely related dialects, now collectively termed Old English, which were brought to the eastern coast of Great Britain by Germanic settlers (Anglo-Saxons) by the 5th century – with the word English being derived from the name of the Angles,[12] and ultimately from their ancestral region of Angeln (in what is now Schleswig-Holstein). A significant number of English words are constructed based on roots from Latin, because Latin in some form was the lingua franca of the Christian Church and of European intellectual life.[13] The language was further influenced by the Old Norse language because of Viking invasions in the 8th and 9th centuries.
The Norman conquest of England in the 11th century gave rise to heavy borrowings from Norman-French, and vocabulary and spelling conventions began to give the appearance of a close relationship with Romance languages[14][15] to what had then become Middle English. The Great Vowel Shift that began in the south of England in the 15th century is one of the historical events that mark the emergence of Modern English from Middle English.
Owing to the assimilation of words from many other languages throughout history, modern English contains a very large vocabulary, with complex and irregular spelling, particularly of vowels. Modern English has not only assimilated words from other European languages, but from all over the world. The Oxford English Dictionary lists over 250,000 distinct words, not including many technical, scientific, and slang terms.[16][17]
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